{{About|the geographical and geopolitical region|the official government divisions of Kenya|Counties of Kenya}}{{Short description|Region in central part of Kenya}} {{Use dmy dates|date=August 2025}} {{Copy edit|date=January 2026}} {{Infobox settlement | official_name = Mount Kenya region | settlement_type = Unofficial geo-political, cultural, and economic region | native_name = Eneo la Mlima Kenya (Sw)<br /> Murima | image_caption = | image_flag = | flag_size = | image_shield = | shield_size = | image_map = Map of Mount Kenya Region.png | map_caption = Map of the Mount Kenya region | coordinates = | image_skyline = {{Photo montage | photo3b = | photo2b = Tea Farm Limuru.jpg | photo2a = Thomson's Falls.jpg | photo3a = Meru National Park, Kenya.jpg | photo4b = | size = 300 | spacing = 7.5 | color = Transparent | border = 0 | foot_montage = Thika Highway ,Thompson Falls, Tea Farming in Limuru,Meru National park, Mt Kenya }} | subdivision_type = Country | subdivision_name = 25px Kenya | subdivision_type1 =• Counties of the region | subdivision_name1 = * <small>25px Embu</small> * <small>25px Kiambu</small> * <small>25px Kirinyaga</small> * <small>25px Laikipia</small> * <small>25px Meru</small> * <small>25px Murang'a</small> * <small>25px Nakuru</small> * <small>25px Nyandarua</small> * <small>25px Nyeri</small> * <small>25px Tharaka-Nithi</small> | established_title = | established_date = |subdivision_type2 = &nbsp;&nbsp;• Largest city |subdivision_name2 = Nakuru City |subdivision_type3 = &nbsp;&nbsp;• Largest town |subdivision_name3 = Thika | seat_type = | seat =

| parts_type = | parts_style = | p1 = | leader_title = | leader_name = | leader_title1 = | leader_name1 = | leader_title2 = | leader_name2 = | area_total_km2 = 34,069 | area_land_km2 = | area_water_km2 = | elevation_m = | population_footnotes = | population_total = 10.7 million<ref name="pop">{{Cite web|title=Kenya Population by County and Sub County|publisher=KNBS|website=www.knbs.or.ke|url=https://www.knbs.or.ke/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/2019-Kenya-population-and-Housing-Census-Population-households-density-by-county.xlsx |accessdate=18 June 2025|date=September 2023|language=en}}</ref> <br /> | population_as_of = 2019 | population_density_km2 = 251.6 | population_est = 11.9 million | pop_est_as_of = 2025 | demographics_type1 = GDP (PPP) | demographics1_title1 = Total | demographics1_info1 = {{increase }} $64.41 &nbsp;billion (2024)<ref name='GDP'>{{cite web|url=https://www.knbs.or.ke/gross-county-product/|title=Gross County Product|access-date=14 May 2025|publisher=KNBS|website=www knbs.or.ke}}</ref> | demographics1_title2 = Per Capita | demographics1_info2 = {{increase }} $6,900 (2024) | demographics_type2 = GDP (NOMINAL)| | demographics2_title1 = Total | demographics2_info1 = {{increase}} $21.57 Billion (2024)| | demographics2_title2 = Per Capita | demographics2_info2 = {{increase}} $2,310 (2024) | blank1_name_sec1 = HDI (2023) | blank1_info_sec1 = {{increase}} 0.644<ref>{{Cite web|title=Kenyan counties by human development index|publisher=Statista|website=statskenya.co.ke|url=https://statskenya.co.ke/at-stats-kenya/about/human-development-index-in-kenya-hdi-by-county/114/ |accessdate=14 May 2025|language=en}}</ref> <br />-&nbsp;{{ font color | orange| |medium}} | timezone = EAT | utc_offset = +3 | website = | footnotes = Data for the Mt Kenya region is an aggregate of individual county figures. }} The '''Mount Kenya region''', sometimes referred to as the '''Mt Kenya region''',<ref name="Mt">{{cite web|last=Makhanu|first=Mabonga|date=2025-08-27|title=Ichung'wah backs calls to declare Kiambu a region separate from Mt Kenya|url=https://peopledaily.digital/inside-politics/ichungwah-backs-calls-to-declare-kiambu-a-region-separate-from-mt-kenya|access-date=2026-01-29|website=People Daily}}</ref> and referred to as ''Mlima'' in the Swahili language or ''Murima'' (meaning "''The Mountain''" in the Kikuyu language), is a geopolitical, cultural and economic area located in the central part of Kenya. The region is mostly centered around and named for Mount Kenya, the highest mountain in Kenya and the second-highest in Africa (after Mount Kilimanjaro).

It is generally considered to consist of 10 of the 47 counties of Kenya: Nyeri, Meru, Kirinyaga, Embu, Tharaka-Nithi, Kiambu, Murang'a, Laikipia, and Nyandarua, and Nakuru.<ref name="Paper">{{cite conference |last=Munene |first=Macharia |title=Mount Kenya Region in the Kenyan State |url=https://erepo.usiu.ac.ke/bitstream/handle/11732/3999/Mount%20Kenya%20Region%20In%20The%20Kenyan%20State%20by%20Macharia%20Munene.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y |format=PDF |conference=Social, Economic and Political Positioning of Our Region |publisher=United States International University Africa |place=Nairobi, Kenya |date=21 September 2018 |page=2 |quote=These are troubled times, and they are more troubled for the people in the Mount Kenya area than in any other region. The region is literary central, with Nyeri County at the centre, going around the Mountain through Kiambu, Nyandarua, Nakuru, Laikipia, Meru, Tharaka Nithi, Embu, Kirinyaga, Murang'a and back to Kiambu. }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Tamaro|first=Emmanuel|last2=Nyabuto|first2=Clinton|title=List of all counties in the MT Kenya region and their constituencies|url=https://www.tuko.co.ke/facts-lifehacks/490212-list-counties-mt-kenya-region-constituencies/|website=Tuko|publisher=Tuko Media, Ltd|date=16 January 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20260115050438/https://www.tuko.co.ke/facts-lifehacks/490212-list-counties-mt-kenya-region-constituencies|archive-date=15 January 2026|quote=Kenyan politics has given the Mount Kenya region a different meaning. Geographically, counties in the MT Kenya region surround or are within the boundaries of Mount Kenya. The counties are Nyeri, Kirinyaga, Embu, Tharaka Nithi, Meru, and Laikipia. Since Mount Kenya was in the former Central province, the Mount Kenya region now includes Kiambu, Murang'a, and Nyandarua Counties. But because of Kenyan geopolitics, Nakuru is now considered in the Mount Kenya region.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Kiambu County|url=https://kiambu.go.ke/kiambu-county/|website=County Government of Kiambu official website (kiambu.go.ke)|publisher=County Government of Kiambu|date=2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241104020805/https://kiambu.go.ke/kiambu-county/|archive-date=4 November 2024|quote=The County is a member of Central Region Economic Bloc (CEREB) that bring together ten counties drawn from the larger Mount Kenya region namely: Embu, Kiambu, Kirinyaga, Laikipia, Nakuru, Nyandarua, Nyeri, Meru, Murang'a and Tharaka Nithi. The bloc was established through an MoU in February 2016 with the overall goal of harmonizing laws and regulations to facilitate trade and investment, leveraging competitive and comparative advantages and economies of scale to create employment opportunities and incomes, and tap into technology development to expand economic frontiers in the member counties.}}</ref> The region is occasionally referred to as consisting of 9 counties,<ref>{{cite news|last=Mwere|first=David|title=Voter registration apathy hits Mt Kenya counties|url=https://nation.africa/kenya/counties/voter-registration-apathy-hits-mt-kenya-3715772|work=Nation|publisher=Nation Media Group|date=14 February 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220214053149/https://nation.africa/kenya/counties/voter-registration-apathy-hits-mt-kenya-3715772|archive-date=14 February 2022|quote=...the nine counties from Mount Kenya region...}}</ref> excluding Nakuru, which is sometimes considered as being either on the "periphery" of the Mount Kenya region or as belonging to the Great Rift Valley region. As of early 2026, the inclusion of Kiambu in this bloc has become a subject of political debate. A movement led by some Kiambu leaders has sought to distance the county from the "Mount Kenya" label.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Makhanu|first=Mabonga|date=2025-08-27|title=Ichung'wah backs calls to declare Kiambu a region separate from Mt Kenya|url=https://peopledaily.digital/inside-politics/ichungwah-backs-calls-to-declare-kiambu-a-region-separate-from-mt-kenya|access-date=2026-01-29|website=People Daily|language=en}}</ref>

As of 2025, the region has an estimated population of approximately 11.9 million people. The region's major urban centers include Nakuru City, Thika, and Ruiru.

While widely recognized in political discourse, it is not an official administrative or governmental unit under the 2010 Constitution, which recognizes only the national government and the 47 Counties of Kenya.

== Demographics== As of 2025, the population of the Mount Kenya region is estimated to be approximately 11.9 million. Kiambu County is the most populous county with, as of 2025, an estimated 2.7 million people, followed by Nakuru County with an estimated 2.4 million people, while Tharaka-Nithi has the smallest population at around 425,000 people. Tharaka-Nithi and Kirinyaga counties had the least population growth with 0.95% and 0.91% respectively. thumb|center|Regional population by county {| class="wikitable sortable" |+ Population in Mt Kenya (2020–2030) (in thousands) ! !! County !! 2020 !! 2021 !! 2022 !! 2023 !! 2024 !! 2025 !! 2030<br /> (projection) |- ! colspan="2" style="background:#f2f2f2;" | '''Mt Kenya Region''' | 10,970 || 11,178 || 11,390 || 11,547 || 11,752 || 11,909 || 13,010 |- | 1 || 25px Kiambu || 2,501 || 2,552 || 2,602 || 2,653 || 2,704 || 2,754 || 3,006 |- | 2 || 25px Nakuru || 2,162 || 2,240 || 2,320 || 2,347 || 2,420 || 2,445 || 2,900 |- | 3 || 25px Meru || 1,565 || 1,586 || 1,606 || 1,626 || 1,646 || 1,666 || 1,765 |- | 4 || 25px Murang'a || 1,077 || 1,088 || 1,100 || 1,112 || 1,124 || 1,136 || 1,194 |- | 5 || 25px Nyeri || 810 || 818 || 827 || 835 || 844 || 853 || 895 |- | 6 || 25px Kirinyaga || 657 || 670 || 683 || 696 || 708 || 721 || 783 |- | 7 || 25px Tharaka-Nithi || 403 || 408 || 412 || 416 || 421 || 425 || 446 |- | 8 || 25px Embu || 629 || 635 || 642 || 648 || 655 || 662 || 692 |- | 9 || 25px Laikipia || 529 || 539 || 550 || 561 || 572 || 583 || 639 |- | 10 || 25px Nyandarua || 637 || 642 || 648 || 653 || 658 || 664 || 690 |} === Religion=== {{see also|List of Kenyan counties by Christian population}} thumb|Nyeri Cathedral Church, Nyeri County As per a 2019 survey,<ref name="2019 religion survey">{{Cite web|title=Religious Affiliation by County in Kenya|website=www.africacheck.org|publisher=Africa Check|url=https://africacheck.org/sites/default/files/media/documents/2024-04/Kenya-Religion-%20Statistics-2019.pdf |accessdate=2025-05-15|language=en}}</ref> Christianity is the dominant religion within the Mount Kenya region with 96.29% identifying as Christian, 10.79 percentage points greater than Kenya nationally, at 85%. Protestantism was the largest denomination with around 35% being Protestants with Meru County and Tharaka-Nithi County having more than 40% Protestants. Catholicism is the second-largest denomination regionally, with around 26% followed closely by Evangelicalism at about 23%. Independent African churches of Christianity represented 8% of the regional population. Islam constitutes 0.67% of the population. Hindus constitute 0.04% of the regional population. All other religions constitute 1% of the population. 1.63% of the regional population identified as atheists; Nakuru County contained the highest percentage of atheists at 3.16% and Nyeri County contained the fewest, at 0.81%. 0.15% identified as agnostic. About 0.01% of the survey participants did not answer the question regarding their religious beliefs. {| class="wikitable sortable" |+ Religious affiliation within the Mount Kenya region ! County !! Christianity !! Protestantism !! Catholicism !! Evangelicalism !! African-initiated church !! Eastern Orthodox Christianity !! Other form(s) of Christianity!! Islam !! Hindu !! Traditional African religions !! Other religions !! Atheists !! "Don't know" !! Not stated/no answer

|- style="background:#f9f9f9" | '''Mount Kenya region''' || 96.29% || 35.10% || 26.05% || 22.75% || 7.82% || 0.56% || 3.90% || 0.67% || 0.04% || 0.23% || 1.00% || 1.63% || 0.15% || 0.012%

|- | 25px '''Embu''' || 97.39% || 36.62% || 26.98% || 22.71% || 8.43% || 0.60% || 2.06% || 0.47% || 0.02% || 0.06% || 0.81% || 1.14% || 0.11% || 0.01%

|- | 25px '''Kiambu''' || 96.66% || 36.74% || 24.51% || 21.86% || 7.79% || 0.74% || 5.01% || 0.89% || 0.05% || 0.13% || 0.81% || 1.28% || 0.16% || 0.02%

|- | 25px '''Kirinyaga''' || 97.94% || 39.73% || 29.61% || 20.19% || 5.63% || 0.38% || 2.40% || 0.40% || 0.03% || 0.04% || 0.55% || 0.92% || 0.12% || 0.01%

|- | 25px '''Laikipia''' || 92.22% || 29.71% || 28.75% || 21.15% || 6.86% || 0.32% || 5.42% || 1.65% || 0.04% || 1.39% || 1.41% || 3.05% || 0.24% || 0.01%

|- | 25px '''Meru''' || 96.26% || 40.06% || 20.40% || 23.82% || 8.42% || 0.62% || 2.96% || 0.82% || 0.02% || 0.13% || 1.23% || 1.37% || 0.15% || 0.02%

|- | 25px '''Murang'a''' || 97.63% || 39.42% || 24.68% || 19.70% || 9.86% || 0.49% || 3.49% || 0.35% || 0.01% || 0.09% || 0.73% || 1.09% || 0.09% || 0.01%

|- | 25px '''Nakuru''' || 93.69% || 16.31% || 32.85% || 30.23% || 7.19% || 0.57% || 6.53% || 1.19% || 0.08% || 0.21% || 1.43% || 3.16% || 0.23% || 0.01%

|- | 25px '''Nyandarua''' || 95.94% || 30.46% || 17.13% || 30.69% || 11.15% || 0.58% || 5.92% || 0.15% || 0.01% || 0.11% || 1.38% || 2.31% || 0.09% || 0.01%

|- | 25px '''Nyeri''' || 97.75% || 37.96% || 27.95% || 19.27% || 9.09% || 0.63% || 2.84% || 0.60% || 0.02% || 0.08% || 0.61% || 0.81% || 0.13% || 0.00%

|- | 25px '''Tharaka-Nithi''' || 97.39% || 44.02% || 27.67% || 17.90% || 4.79% || 0.68% || 2.33% || 0.19% || 0.00% || 0.06% || 1.04% || 1.14% || 0.16% || 0.02% |} ''Source'':<ref name="2019 religion survey"></ref>

=== Human development=== {{see also|List of Kenyan counties by Human Development Index}} thumb|HDI of Mount Kenya region counties As of 2023, the Human Development Index (HDI) of Mount Kenya region is 0.643 which was higher than the national average of 0.601. Nyeri County, Kiambu County and Embu County are the most developed, all with an HDI exceeding 0.65, with Nyeri County being number-one regionally at 0.678. Murang'a County and Tharaka-Nithi County have the least human development with an HDI of around 0.62. Nakuru County is the median among the region's counties, at 0.641. {| class="wikitable sortable" ! Rank !! County !! HDI |- ! colspan="2" | '''Mount Kenya region''' || 0.643 |- | 1 || 25px Nyeri || 0.678 |- | 2 || 25px Kiambu || 0.663 |- | 3 || 25px Embu || 0.650 |- | 4 || 25px Kirinyaga || 0.646 |- | 5 || 25px Nakuru || 0.641 |- | 6 || 25px Nyandarua || 0.637 |- | 7 || 25px Laikipia || 0.635 |- | 8 || 25px Meru || 0.632 |- | 9 || 25px Tharaka Nithi || 0.626 |- | 10 || 25px Murang'a || 0.625 |}

=== Age distribution === thumb|Median Age in Mount Kenya region The median age of Mount Kenya region is 24.5 which is the highest in the country. Nyeri County and Kirinyaga County have the highest median age of 27 years, followed by Embu County and Murang'a County with 25 years. Laikipia County and Nyandarua County have the least median age with a median age of 21 years. Central Mount Kenya region and East Mount Kenya region had the highest median age while Western and Northern Mount Kenya region had the lowest median age. {| class="wikitable sortable" ! Rank ! County ! Median age |- | 1 | 30px Nyeri | 27.8 |- | 2 | 30px Kirinyaga | 27.5 |- | 3 | 30px Embu | 25.9 |- | 4 | 30px Murang'a | 25.7 |- ! colspan=2 | Mount Kenya (average) ! 24.5 |- | 5 | 30px Meru | 23.9 |- | 6 | 30px Tharaka-Nithi | 23.8 |- | 7 | 30px Kiambu | 23.5 |- | 8 | 30px Nyandarua | 21.8 |- | 9 | 30px Laikipia | 21.1 |- ! colspan=2 | Kenya Average ! 20.1 |}

== History== ''<small>The Mount Kenya region has long been inhabited by a diverse mix of ethnolinguistic groups for centuries.</small>''

The Mount Kenya region has served as a cultural crossroads for centuries, with Cushitic-speaking groups (such as the ancestors of the Dahalo and the now-extinct Yaaku and Taita Cushites), Nilotic-speaking peoples (ancestors of the Kalenjin and Omotik)<ref>{{Cite web |title=UBC |url=https://cases.open.ubc.ca/assessment-of-land-claims-and-rights-of-the-ogiek/ |access-date=2026-01-29 |website=cases.open.ubc.ca}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Dispossession of the Ancestral Lands of the Ogiek of Mount Elgon in Kenya |url=https://www.chepkitale.org/storymap |access-date=2026-01-29 |website=Dispossession of the Ancestral Lands of the Ogiek of Mount Elgon in Kenya}}</ref> and later the Bantu groups arriving in waves from the 3rd century CE onwards.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Exploring Africa |url=https://exploringafrica.matrix.msu.edu/module-twenty-eight-activity-two/#:~:text=Nilotes%20in%20Kenya,,%20Plain,%20and%20Highland%20Nilotes. |access-date=2026-01-29 |website=exploringafrica.matrix.msu.edu}}</ref> This resulted in a complex, intermingled history of migration, interaction, and assimilation, as these communities—including the Kikuyu, Meru, and Embu who established agricultural and trading systems while interacting with earlier hunter-gatherer groups like the Gumba and Athi. The extensive intermingling is evident in modern demographics, with groups like the Kikuyu showing significant genetic and cultural influence from both Cushitic and Nilotic ancestors.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Exploring Africa |url=https://exploringafrica.matrix.msu.edu/module-twenty-eight-activity-two/#:~:text=Nilotes%20in%20Kenya,,%20Plain,%20and%20Highland%20Nilotes. |access-date=2026-01-29 |website=exploringafrica.matrix.msu.edu}}</ref>

Today the Mount Kenya area is home to predominantly the Kenyan Highland Bantu communities and some Nilotic groups such as the Maasai people, an Eastern Nilotic group, have historically interacted with these Bantu groups, particularly in the lower, drier slopes and surrounding plains, such as in Laikipia.<ref>{{Cite Web|title=East Africa Living Encyclopedia|website=africa.upenn.edu|url=https://www.africa.upenn.edu/NEH/kethnic.htm|accessdate=2025-01-28}}</ref> The Gikuyu (Kikuyu), Embu, and Meru are Bantu-speaking peoples who settled in Kenya's central highlands following migrations from the northeast. While their oral tradition and beliefs trace spiritual roots to Mount Kenya (''Kirinyaga''), the mountain serves as a central landmark in a broader traditional cosmology.<ref name="BritannicaKikuyu">{{cite encyclopedia |title=Kikuyu|encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Britannica|url=https://www.britannica.com|access-date=2024-05-22}}</ref> Significant settlement occurred between the 17th and 19th centuries, during which these groups adopted social structures like age set systems through interaction with Nilotic and Cushitic neighbors.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Northwestern University|url=https://open.nupress.northwestern.edu/books/southern-nilotic-history/|website=open.nupress.northwestern.edu|access-date=2026-01-30|language=en}}</ref><ref name="BritannicaKikuyu" /> Governance was maintained through these age-sets and councils such as the Njuri Ncheke and ''Kiama'' (the latter being a group related to a cultural rite of passage among the Kikuyu people). Traditional livelihoods of farming and herding were supplemented by 19th-century trade in ivory and hides.

=== Colonial history === In the late 19th century, Mount Kenya fell under British colonial control. Much of its fertile highland became part of the "''White Highlands''", displacing many local farmers to reserves.<ref>{{Cite web|title=What Was The Mau Mau Uprising? |publisher=IWM|website=www.iwm.org|url=https://www.iwm.org.uk/history/what-was-the-mau-mau-uprising#:~:text=The%20territory%20between%20the%20Indian,in%20the%20fertile%20central%20highlands |accessdate=18 June 2025|language=en}}</ref> African political consciousness rose, and by the 1930s the Kikuyu, Embu and Meru communities began organizing through groups like the Kikuyu Central Association and later the Kenya African Union. This culminated in the Mau Mau uprising (1952–1960), an armed anti-colonial rebellion largely led by Kikuyu (with many Embu and Meru supporters) who hid in the forests of Mount Kenya and Aberdares. Thousands of "oathed" insurgents took refuge on Mt. Kenya, attacking settler farms and colonial outposts. The colonial government's brutal Emergency (villagization, detention camps) took a heavy toll on the local population. Notable figures from the region included Dedan Kimathi (Kikuyu freedom fighter executed by the British), Wangari Maathai (later Nobel laureate environmentalist from Nyeri), and Jomo Kenyatta (a Kikuyu leader from Kiambu who was imprisoned during the Emergency but became Kenya's first president in 1964).

==Geography== The mountain's steep altitude gradient creates distinct ecological zones. Montane forests (Juniperus, Podocarpus, and bamboo) cover the slopes up to about 2,500–3,000 m, above which dense bamboo zone and heathland ("Afro-alpine" heather and giant Lobelia) extend to ~4,000 m, and moorland tussock-grass plains occur up to ~5,000 m. Twelve small glaciers and about 20 tarns (alpine lakes) remain on the highest peaks, though they are rapidly retreating due to climate change. The lower slopes are drained by rivers (tributaries of the River Tana and River Ewaso Nyiro) and feed several reservoirs. For example, the Lewa Wildlife Conservancy in Laikipia County (north of Mount Kenya) and the Ngare Ndare Forest Reserve form part of the mountain's watershed system. These conservancies link the forested foothills of Mt. Kenya to the adjacent Laikipia plateau and Somalian/Maasai savanna ecosystem.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Geology of Mt Kenya area|publisher=Amazonaws|url=https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/samsamwater1/maps/kenya/geology/Geology+of+the+Mount+Kenya+area+2.pdf |accessdate=18 June 2025|language=en}}</ref>

Mount Kenya and its surroundings are protected as a national park and forest reserve, a UNESCO World Heritage site for its outstanding natural beauty and biodiversity. The Mount Kenya National Park (managed by Kenya Wildlife Service) and the adjacent forest reserve (Kenya Forest Service) cover the highlands above ~2,000 m. They safeguard the mountain's unique flora and fauna (elephants, leopards, endemic rodents, alpine birds, etc.). Lower on the mountain are large tea and coffee farms (especially in Kiambu, Kirinyaga, and parts of Meru, Embu and Nyeri), as well as vast dairy pastures. As of the 2019 census, the ten Mt. Kenya counties ranged from very populous (Kiambu: 2,417,735 people; Nakuru: 2,162,202) to sparsely populated (Laikipia: 518,560). The table below summarizes 2019 population and area for each county in the region.

{| class="wikitable sortable" |+ '''Counties of the Mt. Kenya Region (Ranked by Area)''' ! Rank !! County !! Area (km<sup>2</sup>) !! Population (2023 est.) !! Population Density (per km<sup>2</sup>) |- | 1 || Laikipia || 9,508 || 518,560 || 55 |- | 2 || Nakuru || 7,505 || 2,162,202 || 288 |- | 3 || Meru || 7,014 || 1,545,714 || 220 |- | 4 || Nyeri || 3,325 || 759,164 || 228 |- | 5 || Nyandarua || 3,286 || 638,289 || 194 |- | 6 || Embu || 2,821 || 608,599 || 216 |- | 7 || Tharaka-Nithi || 2,564 || 393,177 || 153 |- | 8 || Kiambu || 2,539 || 2,417,735 || 952 |- | 9 || Murang'a || 2,523 || 1,056,640 || 419 |- | 10 || Kirinyaga || 1,478 || 610,411 || 413 |- ! colspan="2" | '''Total''' || '''42,563''' || '''10,710,491''' || '''252''' |}

Except for Kiambu and Nakuru counties, most of the region is predominantly rural. For example, Kiambu's urban population (1,706,785) far exceeds its rural (711,450), whereas Kirinyaga's rural residents (474,187) greatly outnumber its urban (136,224). Agriculture dominates the lower regions, with crops like tea (slopes of Kiambu, Kirinyaga, Nyeri, Tharaka Nithi) and coffee (Meru, Nyeri) as cash crops, plus maize, beans and horticulture. The region is also a dairy powerhouse (Meru alone produces ~200&nbsp;million liters/year of milk) and contains projects like the Mwea irrigation settlement scheme (Kirinyaga).

== Economy== thumb|Mount Kenya Region by GDP per capita (nominal) Agriculture is the backbone of the Mount Kenya economy. The fertile highlands produce tea, coffee, horticultural crops, and dairy on a large scale. With a total GDP of $26 billion, the region contributes around 22% to national GDP . Nakuru and Kiambu are the largest economies contributing around 23% each to the regional GDP. In terms of GDP per capita, Nakuru, Nyeri , Nyandarua and Embu lead with a nominal GDP of more than $7,000 at PPP as of 2023

{| class="wikitable sortable" |+ '''Regional economics (2024, USD billions)''' ! Rank !! County !! GDP (Nominal) !! GDP (PPP) !! Per Capita (Nominal) !! Per Capita (PPP) |- ! colspan="4" |'''Region average''' || 2,248.3 || 6,650.4 |- ! scope="row"| 1 | 25px Kiambu || 6.36 || 18.99 || 2,351 || 7,016 |- ! scope="row"| 2 | 25px Meru || 4.08 || 12.18 || 2,476 || 7,389 |- ! scope="row"| 3 | 25px Nakuru || 5.13 || 13.98 || 2,233 || 6,080 |- ! scope="row"| 4 | 25px Murang'a || 2.29 || 6.84 || 2,041 || 6,090 |- ! scope="row"| 5 | 25px Nyeri || 2.22 || 6.63 || 2,635 || 7,862 |- ! scope="row"| 6 | 25px Nyandarua || 1.69 || 5.05 || 2,388 || 7,125 |- ! scope="row"| 7 | 25px Embu || 1.70 || 5.08 || 2,590 || 7,729 |- ! scope="row"| 8 | 25px Kirinyaga || 1.44 || 4.30 || 2,190 || 6,534 |- ! scope="row"| 9 | 25px Laikipia || 1.05 || 3.13 || 1,828 || 5,454 |- ! scope="row"| 10 | 25px Tharaka-Nithi || 0.74 || 2.21 || 1,751 || 5,225 |- ! colspan="2" |'''Regional total''' |'''26.70''' |'''78.39''' | colspan="2" | |}

== Politics== {{see also|Politics of Kenya|2022 Kenyan general election}} thumb|2022 Presidential elections results in Mount Kenya region The Mount Kenya region is a major political force in Kenya due to its large voting population and cohesive voting patterns. It has historically been a stronghold of Central Kenya leadership – producing presidents Jomo Kenyatta (Kiambu), Mwai Kibaki (Nyeri), and Uhuru Kenyatta (Kiambu/Murang'a) – and commanding a block of electoral votes. Traditionally, Mt. Kenya counties have voted largely as a bloc for parties favored by Kikuyu elites, although splits have occurred (e.g. Ford-Asili in the 1970s, NARC in 2002). In the post-2010 era, new political formations emerged: for example, Kirinyaga's Martha Karua ran for president (2013) and became an opposition figure, while Meru leaders such as Peter Munya and Irungu Kang'ata have been influential in Jubilee and UDA administrations.<ref>{{Cite news|title=Mt Kenya Politics|publisher=Standard Media|url=https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/topic/mt-kenya-politics |accessdate=18 June 2025|language=en}}</ref>

In the 2022 elections, the region swung behind William Ruto's Kenya Kwanza coalition (UDA party) against the traditional Azimio alliance.Issues like county development funds, coffee pricing, and land rights on the mountain frequently dominate local politics.

As of early 2026, the inclusion of Kiambu in this bloc has become a subject of political debate. A movement led by some Kiambu leaders has sought to distance the county from the "Mount Kenya" label.<ref name="Mt"></ref>

== Notable people== *Jomo Kenyatta – First President of Kenya *Wangari Maathai – Nobel Laureate & Environmentalist *Kithure Kindiki - Current Deputy President of Kenya *Dedan Kimathi – Mau Mau Leader *Martha Koome - Chief Justice of Kenya *Mwai Kibaki – Third President of Kenya *Uhuru Kenyatta – Fourth President of Kenya *Justin Muturi - Seventh Speaker of the National Assembly of Kenya and Eighth Attorney General of The Republic of Kenya *Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o – Novelist & Decolonization Advocate *Musa Mwariama – Mau Mau Field Marshal *Martha Karua – Politician & Former Justice Minister *Rigathi Gachagua – Deputy President *Simon Gicharu – Founder, Mount Kenya University *Cecily Mutitu Mbarire – Second Governor of The County of Embu. *Kubu Kubu – Mau Mau General.

== See also== * 2022 Kenyan Presidential Election in Mount Kenya Region

== References == {{Reflist}}

{{coord missing|Kenya}}

Category:Counties of Kenya Category:Mount Kenya region Category:Regions of Kenya